Advertisement
Advertisement
displace
[dis-pleys]
verb (used with object)
to compel (a person or persons) to leave home, country, etc.
to move or put out of the usual or proper place.
Synonyms: relocateto take the place of; replace; supplant.
Fiction displaces fact.
to remove from a position, office, or dignity.
Obsolete., to rid oneself of.
displace
/ dɪsˈpleɪs /
verb
to move from the usual or correct location
to remove from office or employment
to occupy the place of; replace; supplant
to force (someone) to leave home or country, as during a war
chem to replace (an atom or group in a chemical compound) by another atom or group
physics to cause a displacement of (a quantity of liquid, usually water of a specified type and density)
Other Word Forms
- displaceable adjective
- predisplace verb (used with object)
- undisplaceable adjective
- displacer noun
Word History and Origins
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Rows of tents - which have sprung up over the city to shelter Palestinians displaced by the Israeli military campaign - have also disappeared over the past month, the images show.
Medics said two people were killed in one strike on a tent at a camp for displaced families in western Gaza City, close to al-Shifa hospital.
Since 14 August, more than 82,000 people had been newly displaced, according to the cluster.
That disaster, along with the Palisades fire, displaced two distinct communities with deep roots in the music industry.
The UN has also said tent camps for the displaced in the south are overcrowded and unsafe, and that southern hospitals are operating at several times their capacity.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse